Radhakishan Damani’s Success In D’Mart Is Due To Focus On Profits & Avoiding “Nonsense”: Shankar Sharma

Shankar Sharma has opined that the reason Radhakishan Damani achieved enormous success in D’Mart even though others have failed miserably is because the Billionaire focused on elementary aspects of business and avoided “nonsense” metrics like GMV etc

In an earlier piece, we have seen how enormously profitable D’Mart is. This financial performance of the offline retailer is in sharp contrast with that of online retailers like Flipkart and Snapdeal which have notched up such heavy losses that they are now tottering on the brink of insolvency.

In theory, online retailers ought to have higher profit margins than their brick-n-mortar counterparts because they are spared of the high costs of rentals for shops and salaries for salespersons.

Also, if one follows the ‘market place’ model (which all online retailers in India do), then even the working capital costs of stocking inventory are not there.

Obsession with ‘GMV’

For some reason, online retailers have come to believe that the only way to show supremacy in the market place is by increasing the ‘GMV’ (gross merchandise value) of the products sold.

In a desperate game of one-upmanship, they organized events like ‘Big Billion Day sale’, ‘Happy Republic Day Sale’ etc in which extravagant discounts were offered to lure shoppers.

Obsession with ‘vanity’ metrics proves fatal for Stayzilla

Stayzilla is the latest e-com venture to fall victim to the obsession with vanity factors like GMV.

The goodbye letter written by Yogendra Vasupal, the young and dynamic founder of stayzilla, makes for tearful reading.

“I would like to announce today that we would be bringing to a halt the operations of Stayzilla,” Vasupal said in a grim tone.

He explained that in the early days of the venture, the focus was on the traditional aspects of running a business and things were chugging along smoothly.

“The initial 7 years were all about having negative working capital, positive cash flow and a sustained ability to fund our own growth. Those were the only metrics we tracked,” he said.

Unfortunately, somewhere down the line, the obsession to be the biggest home stay venture took over:

“I can honestly state that somewhere I lost my path. I started treasuring GMV, room-nights and other ‘vanity’ metrics instead of the fundamentals of cash flow and working capital,” Vasupal lamented.

“GMV makes no sense and is a dangerous path to take”: Experts

Ironically, some in the online sector had realized that the obsession with GMV and other ‘vanity’ metrics would lead all ventures into imminent destruction.

“GMV is complete nonsense and has been used by certain players to justify their valuations,” Nils Chrestin of Jabong thundered.

“That is a very dangerous path to be on if you want to build a sustainable, professionally managed company …. The more creative way of gaining market share is to focus on having best selection and a great customer experience ….. That is what we are focused on … a sustainable long-term business,” he added.

Other luminaries like the founders like Pepperfry and Firstcry explained why they are opposed to the GMV race.

Unfortunately, the words of wisdom of Nils Chrestin and the others fell on deaf ears.

End of the road for Snapdeal?

According to reports, Snapdeal has only $100 million (Rs. 650 crore) in its bank account.

Snapdeal recently sacked about 600 employees and this has helped it to reduce the cash burn from USD 30 million per month to Rs. USD 10 million per month.

If Snapdeal does go under, an investment of USD 1.75 billion (Rs. 11,375 crore) made by elite investors like Softbank, Kalaari Capital, Temasek, Alibaba Group, eBay and others will go down the drain.

Radhakishan Damani avoids juvenile temptations

In sharp contrast to the attitude of venture capitalists who behaved like drunken sailors in encouraging the promoters to burn cash, Rashakishan Damani kept steady on the conservative path of growing the business in a slow and steady pace after ensuring that the profitability is not compromised.

“We do not open a new store, even if our finances allow us to, unless we are sure we can run it as efficiently as our existing stores,” Neville Noronha, the CEO of D’Mart said, giving a glimpse of the conservative business approach.

D-Mart has also followed the strategy of opening stocks in the suburbs in the metros and in tier II and tier III cities. This keeps the operational costs low.

“D-Mart is the first retailer to cross the billion dollar mark profitably,” Santosh Verma of IDFC Capital said with admiration in his voice.

The results of Radhakishan Damani’s conservative approach is here for us to see. The IPO is slated to be a blockbuster success even while its rivals are wondering where their next meal will come from.

Unbelievable rush for D Mart IPO….from what i hear is that HNI category will be subscribed 300x

Conclusion

The combined wisdom of Radhakishan Damani and Shankar Sharma makes it clear that all investment proposals must be evaluated on the traditional parameters of free cash flows, valuations etc. Anyone who strays from the beaten path and attempts to be adventurous stands a grave risk of getting lost!

Hype is being created by his fellows and friends .This may be good company but due to hype unreasonable premium is being taken.But still it will open at premium to IPO price but my fingers are crossed for those who may buy in secondary market .Reliance will be biggest player in Retail after 5 Years and other players will be fighting for survival like in telecom.

I beg to differ Kharb Ji, as I have seen multiple Reliance stores being shut down after being mismanaged. Everyone except the store managers knew this (mismanagement). Reliance also shut down it’s milk business in several cities. I see Reliance closing it’s retail business in next 5 years.

I will say in the next few years Retail will be hived off as a separate company and its shares quoted in the market. Existing RIL shareholders will get shares of Retail. But what a “jack of all trades” company this is. Its businesses range from Textiles to petrochemicals, polymers, Oil Refining, Fuel retailing, oil and gas E & P, shipping (owning and chartering), domestic trading, international trading, grocery retailing, vegetables retailing, footwear, jewellery, lifestyle retailing, telecom, hospitals, treasury management, ship building, defence manufacturing, power plants, power distribution, power trading, cement manufacturing, FM Radio Channels, mobile phones, Forbes India, CNBCTV18, CNNIBN, Viacom18, Firstpost, Moneycontrol, TV18, TV18 Broadcast, a host of startup companies, and the list may be half complete….how the hell can such a company give value to its shareholders I fail to understand. Where is the focus? And how can any analyst predict cash flows of such a muddled up company? And the numbers the company is projecting prospects of Jio, seems imaginary. And what will happen if BJP does get majority in 2019? I will advise anyone to stay away from this entire group. Almost all the world’s top gurus advise you should invest in a stock only if the business is understandable and simple. This one is far, far from it.

After lot of research and personal experience, I have shortlisted these stock advisories for long term investments. Have very good experience with all of them. You can choose yourself : 1. PA Wealth Advisors ( www.pawealthadvisors.com ) 2. Stock Axis (www.stocksaxis.com) 3. Stalwart (www.stalwartvalue.com)

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